I can see the advantages but if you go VOIP only then no broadband and there's no phone; if you live in a poor signal area you could be completely cut off in an emergency. At least on the current system, POTS is likely to be there even if the broadband does go down.
Certainly a valid point, but I can get a mobile signal from all of the networks (and your phone should be able to place 999 calls on any available network if yours is unavailable).
I haven't had reliability issues with either my phone or my broadband - at least, not to the point where it is totally broken for an extended period. I could implement some sort of 3G/4G backup in my router and carry VoIP calls over that too.
I guess it depends on the eventual pricing. If it's not a substantial saving I may not bother
Sipgate will give you a free number with the same local prefix code, along with calls for 1ppm, about the same as Skype out calls. No need to wait for naked BB, pay high call cost or lose your landline.
Of course - I already have a number with my chosen VoIP provider, but lots of people have my landline number, so (if SOGEA is a go-er) it'd be nice to take that to VoIP too
Edited by deleted (Sat 05-Mar-16 19:08:15)